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Summary Of: X Club

The nine men who would comprise the X Club already knew each other well... men who would come to make up the X Club formed two distinct sets of friends... The X Club came together during a period of turbulent conflict in both science and religion in... The members of what would become the X Club sided with the... the members of the X Club were joined in a fight... including those members of the X Club such as Hooker and Huxley... the X club and its members gained much prominence within the scientific community... the men of the X Club continued to gain influential positions... the members of the X Club had prominent positions within the scientific community... two of the remaining eight members of the X club were in good health...

Encyclodia Page On: X Club

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| | Thomas Henry Huxley | dining club | natural selection | late 19th century England | Thomas Henry Huxley | November 3 | 1864 | London | George Busk | Edward Frankland | Thomas Archer Hirst | Joseph Dalton Hooker | John Lubbock | Herbert Spencer | William Spottiswoode | John Tyndall | social network | holidays | Charles Darwin | On the Origin of Species | naturalism | natural history | liberal | Anglican | Royal Society | scientific community | | | Joseph Dalton Hooker | November 3 | 1864 | Albemarle Street | London | artisans | scientists | surgeons | naturalists | Royal Institution | middle-class | theological beliefs | natural history | naturalism | | | Edward Frankland | Victorian England | Charles Darwin | On the Origin of Species through Natural Selection | clerical | Church of England | evolutionism | liberal theologians | Copley Medal | Essays and Reviews | Christianity | liberal | Anglicans | history | prehistory | Bible | higher critics | literature | heresy | Samuel Wilberforce | British Association for the Advancement of Science | Bishop | John William Colenso | Natal | Old Testament | mathematics | population dynamics | food supply | | | John Tyndall | race theory | Anthropological Society of London | slavery | Ethnological Society of London | learned societies | England | professionalism | | | John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury | sociability | dogmas | blastoderm | cells | ovum | birds | guide | unorthodox | Athenaeum Club | Royal Society | Burlington House | William Benjamin Carpenter | physiologist | James Fergusson | architect | consonants | Slavonic | | | Herbert Spencer | Scientific Lazzaroni | United States | Society of Arcueil | France | presidency | London Mathematical Society | Royal College of Surgeons | Chemical Society | Royal Medal | Darwin Medals | Rumford Medal | Lyell Medal | Wollaston Medal | honorary degrees | Prussian | Pour le Mérite | Order of Merit | knighted | Privy Councillor | Justice of the Peace | Corresponding Members | French Academy of Sciences | caucus | Richard Owen | pension | candidacy | Parliament of the United Kingdom | | | William Spottiswoode | typhoid | nationalisation | Victorian era | Naturalism (philosophy) | Liberalism | Natural history | Liberal Christianity | Natural Selection | Isis | Chicago | University of Chicago Press | doi | ISSN | OCLC | Cambridge | Cambridge University | ISSN | Moore, James | W. W. Norton & Company | ISBN 0-393-31150-3 | OCLC | doi | ISSN | OCLC | Hall, Marie Boas | Royal Society | doi | ISSN | OCLC | ISSN | OCLC | Royal Society | doi | ISSN | OCLC | Scientific Monthly | Washington, D.C. | American Association for the Advancement of Science | December 1 | 2006 | Jonathan Cape | ISBN 0-7126-6837-3 | OCLC | Ashgate Publishing | ISBN 0-7546-5321-9 | OCLC | Categories | Scientific organizations | Dining clubs | Clubs and societies in the United Kingdom | Religion and science |
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